Awarded Theses 2015/2016 Iva Lazarova Razor-Wired. Stranded Migrants in Macedonia European Regional Master’s Programme in Democracy and Human Rights in South East Europe EIUC gracefully acknowledges the contribution of the European Commission which made this pubblication possible. IVA LAZAROVA RAZOR-WIRED. STRANDED MIGRANTS IN MACEDONIA RAZOR-WIRED. STRANDED MIGRANTS IN MACEDONIA ABSTRACT This thesis builds a theoretical pyramid of the border strategies employed by European and – consequently, Macedonian officials in the context of the migrant crisis of 2015-2016. At the base of this pyramid lay (1) the building of Fortress Europe along the external borders of the Union and (2) the simultaneous thickening of those borders towards territories outside the continent. I argue that in this configuration the Balkans are turned into borderlands where a state of exception allows for easier deviation of the common norms. Macedonia’s strategy of ‘bordering, ordering and othering’ of the migrants, stays at the top of the pyramid of exclusive border policies. Their result I expose through the detail research on the human rights violations endured by the stranded migrants in the Balkan state. Unable to regulate their stay in Macedonia, they are, in practice, denied the Arendtian Right to have rights. KEY WORDS Border Politics, Macedonia, Stranded Migrants, European migrant crisis, the Balkan Route 3 IVA LAZAROVA ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Dear Alina, thank you! I honestly feel privileged for having the opportunity to travel through the academic world with such an intelligent, inspiring and supportive partner. The affection that you cherish for this challenging universe is contagious and helped me discover, for the first time, some of its small wonders. I very much hope that the academic journey would continue, for both of us. I would like to thank Prof. Anna Krasteva, for her unconditional support throughout this whole ambitious endeavor. I am grateful for the guidance, high- level comments and the advice, which were always delivered so kindly and gracefully. This work would have been impossible without my colleagues in IOM Macedonia, whose profound expertise and knowledge were generously shared with me. I am particularly thankful to Vanja Mirkovski and Tanja Kjaeva for their willingness to find answers to my endless questions. It was an honor to work along Atanas Trajkov who makes the ‘Vinojug’ camp a little more welcoming place for its inhabitants. Last, I would like to thank all the Syrian, Iraqi and Afghani people in the camp, who readily participated in my research, never turned down any of my requests, and shared my enthusiasm for this thesis until the end. Their silent dignity is inspiring. 4 RAZOR-WIRED. STRANDED MIGRANTS IN MACEDONIA LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS ALDE Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe CEAS Common European Asylum System CoE Council of Europe CJEU Court of Justice of the European Union EASO European Asylum Support Office EBCG European Border and Coast Guard EBCGA European Border and Coast Guard Agency EURODAC European Dactyloscopy (European fingerprint database for identifying asylum seekers and irregular border crossers) ECHR European Convention on Human Rights ECtHR European Court of Human Rights EU European Union ESTA Electronic System for Travel Authorization, USA GUE/NGL European United Left/Nordic Green Left IOM International Organization for Migration LATP Law on Asylum and Temporary Protection, Macedonia MIM Ministry of Interior of Macedonia MYLA Macedonian Young Lawyers Association RCCM Regional Centre for Crisis Management, Gevgelija SMF Stranded Migrant Facility of IOM UKIP United Kingdom Independence Party UN United Nations UNESCO United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization UNHCR United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees 5 RAZOR-WIRED. STRANDED MIGRANTS IN MACEDONIA TABLE OF CONTENTS 9 Introduction 16 1. Border Politics 16 1.1. Between ‘De-bordization’ and ‘Re-bordization’: a Reconfiguration of the Border Concept 16 1.1.1. Cartography of the Border Studies 25 1.1.2. Bordering, Ordering, Othering 27 1.1.3. Contemporary Characteristics of Border Politics 27 Thickening and de-territorialization of borders 27 Technology and New Borders 30 Zones of Indistinction. Securitization 31 Scenes of Performance 32 1.2. Borders and the Balkans 34 1.3. Borders and Refugees 37 1.4. Stranded Migrants 38 1.4.1. Definition and Concept 42 1.4.2. Reasons for Becoming Stranded: Border Politics and Beyond 44 1.4.3. Vulnerabilities Conclusion 46 47 2. Asylum Politicies and European Responses to the Migrant Crisis 48 2.1. ‘Exodus of Biblical Proportions’: Numbers, Drivers and Challenges of the Crisis 49 Drivers of the Crisis 50 How the crisis evolved 52 Challenges faced by EU 53 2.2. A System on its Knees: European Refugee Framework 55 2.3. European Responses to the Crisis 56 2.3.1. The Deal with Turkey: a Border Off-Shored – a Crisis Out- Sourced 59 2.3.2. Building the ‘Fortress Europe’: Thick Borders & Securitization 63 2.3.3. The Quota System: A Drop in the Ocean, A Dust In the Eyes 7 IVA LAZAROVA 65 2.3.4. The Balkans: European Borderlands? 67 Conclusion 68 3. Macedonia’s Case: a Country Trapped, a Migrant Trap 71 3.1. The Migrant Crisis: from Anarchy to Border Closure 71 3.1.1. Violations under the Veil of Ignorance 73 3.1.2. Towards a State of Emergency 76 3.1.3. A Present from Orban – the Fence 78 3.1.4. A Border Sealed 79 3.2. Border Politics in Action 80 3.2.1. Goals of Skopje’s Border Politics 80 Answer to the Imminent Pressure of the West 81 Escape the Burden of Hosting Stranded Communities 82 Positioning as a Stable EU Partner 84 3.2.2. Border Strategies 84 3.2.2.1. Bordering through Push-Backs 86 3.2.2.2. Ordering Through Subjective Assessment on Possible Entries 87 3.2.2.3. Othering the Stranded Migrants 92 3.3. Human Rights Violations as a Product of Border Politics 95 Conclusion 96 Conclusion 100 Bibliography 8 RAZOR-WIRED. STRANDED MIGRANTS IN MACEDONIA INTRODUCTION Europe has a history of being terrified of the other, the stranger, the enemy within or without. Seven decades ago that fear took the form of yellow badges, ghettos, railways with dead ends. Their toxic legacy inspired European statesmen to create a peaceful continent, ‘united in diversity’, a safe haven where ethical catastrophes were never to be repeated. The migrant crisis that has engulfed Europe in the last two years, suddenly, resuscitated the ghost of this familiar fear of the stranger. Today it marches proudly with Neo-Nazis through the centers of the big cities; it kills immigrant workers in the UK, and forcefully undresses Muslim women in France. It has brought to power the extreme right in Central Europe; it has inspired enviably wealthy countries like Denmark to seize assets from refugees. This same fear has erected razor-wire fences. After months of chaotic scenes at its Greek shores and countless fruitless summits, the European Union chose to back down to public horror and close its borders to refugees and other ‘irregular’ migrants. The deal with Turkey which saw the return of everyone crossing from its territory into EU after 20 March 2016 was fortified by a decision to seal all frontiers along the Balkan route. What Brussels intentionally or not ignored, though, was the fate of the people trapped between the cascades of closing borders in the region. Thousands of migrants found themselves stranded in Greece, Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria, in squalid conditions, with unclear legal status and numerous rights restricted.1 This thesis is a multidisciplinary research on the plight of the people 1 According to IOM data their numbers as of 6 October 2016 are: 60,067 in Greece, 4,992 in Serbia, 7070 in Bulgaria, and 183 in Macedonia. Migration Flows Europe, IOM Database, available at: http://migration.iom.int/europe/. 9 IVA LAZAROVA blocked while transiting through Macedonia. Their stay in the country is not covered by any law: the 72-hour residence permits, which they received when entering the country, expired months ago, there is still no procedure for claiming asylum underway. Without valid documents, the migrants who escaped the wars in Syria, Iraq and Afghanistan are bound to spend months in closed camps, with no rights of free movement, without access to work and education, and without any clarity on their future. The limited economic, social and physical freedom and the passive dependence on humanitarian aid is a source of great suffering for the community whose problems the authorities in Skopje stubbornly and continuously refuse to address. RESEARCH QUESTIONS, AIMS, AND FRAMEWORK Situated between a set of academic fields, including philosophy, international relations, sociology, and political science, this study tries to answer several questions. First, what is the process of border thickening and why does it take place in Europe today? Second, how does the border thickening process in Europe, driven by EU migration strategies, shape migration policies in Macedonia? Third, why do migrants become stranded in Macedonia? Fourth, why do stranded migrants not have access to basic human rights? I analyze and answer these questions through the philosophic and political lens of border studies. In this thesis I come to identify in the actions of the Macedonian authorities the crucial theoretical principles of exclusive border politics, insightfully synthesized by Henk van Houtum and Tor van Naerssen as ‘bordering, ordering and othering’. The sealed frontier with Greece, the razor fence and the numerous police patrols along it are a clear manifestation of Skopje’s ‘bordering’ ambition: to prove it can secure and govern its own economic welfare and identity. The border space is firmly ‘Macedonianized’, thus underlying the differentiation between the locals and the newcomers. Migrants are othered, projected as security threats, associated with the traumatic refugee crisis in 1999 and the Kosovar Albanians, and thus: locked in border camps and separated from the rest.
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